Guests and staff at the Allegria Hotel in Long Beach said they didn’t notice anything out of the ordinary last Friday, but a female registered guest — around 30 years old — notified security around 4 a.m., saying she was raped in a hotel room.

The Allegria Hotel in Long Beach
A bankruptcy judge has approved a plan to reorganize the finances of the Allegria Hotel in Long Beach, according to Allen Rosenberg, who opened the 143-room hotel in 2009.

Rosenberg’s development company, Alrose King David, filed for Chapter 11 protection last July, listing between $10 million and $50 million in liabilities to more than 50 creditors.

The company had also been sued by dozens of contractors owed money for their work on the project.

“We’ve exited bankruptcy successfully,” Rosenberg said.

The principal note on the hotel, which Alrose had defaulted on, is now held by Investors Savings Bank and has been cut from $38 million to $24 million.

A real estate appraiser put the market value of the Allegria at $22 million, according to court documents. That’s the same amount that Alrose spent in 2006 to buy the crumbling property – once a 172-room retirement home called the King David.

He then spent millions more to redevelop it into a posh, waterfront hotel.